Have you wanted to add more people into your sketches but find you don’t because you’re afraid to? Here’s my best tip: Sketch them first. By getting to what you find hardest first, you avoid the extra burden of worrying if you’ll mess up a sketch once you’ve put considerable time and effort into it. Next, move on to the rest. Take your time building in around your figures. The longer you wait to draw in people into your scenes, the more chance you’ll draw in tight and stilted figures.

Here’s how I created this little vignette: 1) People first in brushpen. I’m judging their size and placement relative to each other as I draw them in. 2) Simple lines add in my background building and a few lines indicate the street and connect all the figures in my sketch. I switched to graphite for a line that is similar in looseness to my brushpen lines but has less contrast to the paper so the background wouldn’t compete with my figures. 3) And then came color.

You can apply that same process to a longer sketch and take your time over it.This time my people are sketched in graphite, a softer medium and you can see how they appear quieter in the scene that my first sketch.

I worked at the piece below the other way around: The buildings and cars and trees, line and color, went in first. And then I used a brush pen to sketch in people.

The end result looks really similar to the earlier sketch, but I find I am more reluctant to draw loosely and boldly into a piece when I sketch this way. All three pieces are sketched in downtown Los Gatos, California.

Thanks, Suhita. I once was told that when sketching people in a crowd, concentrate on a couple of foreground characters then simply “make carrot shapes in the background.” Sounds silly, I know, but it has worked for me when I have been in a hurry. Good luck to you in Manchester. Wish I was going so I could be in your workshop.